Doris Keane | |
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Basil Sydney and Doris Keane as Romeo and Juliet.
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Born |
St. Joseph, Michigan, U.S. |
December 12, 1881
Died | November 25, 1945 New York City, New York, U.S. |
(aged 63)
Resting place | Tower Hill Cemetery, Edgartown Dukes County Massachusetts |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1903-1925 |
Spouse(s) |
Basil Sydney (1918–25; divorced) |
Children | 1 |
Doris Keane (December 12, 1881 - November 25, 1945) was an American actress.
She was born in the St. Joseph, Michigan to Joseph Keane and Minnie Florence Winter, a comedian. She was educated largely in Europe.
Her first professional role was in Whitewashing Julia in 1903. This was a small role but she went on to play leading roles in The Happy Marriage in 1909 and The Lights o' London in 1911.
In 1913, she played Margherita Cavallini in Edward Sheldon's Romance. Her leading man in this long running play was William Courtenay, who played the part of a priest. Sheldon had originally offered the male lead to his friend John Barrymore, but Barrymore turned it down, preferring to still do comedies. Sheldon reportedly fell in love with her and yearned for her all his life. She played this part in America and Europe for the next five years and returned in revivals regularly during the 1920s.
In 1920, she made a silent film of Romance distributed by the then newly formed United Artists. Her male lead in the film was Basil Sydney. She played Catherine the Great in Czarina in 1922 after Sheldon had revised the play especially for her.
She married Basil Sydney, thirteen years her junior, in 1918; they divorced in 1925. She had one child, Ronda Keane (1915-2008), born in Cannes, France in 1915. Ronda's father was the financier Howard Gould. He acknowledged his paternity but never married Doris. Ronda married Dr Carl Muschenheim, a New York based thoracic specialist, in 1951.
Doris Keane was an avid reader, leaving behind an extensive library including The Upanishads. She was a favorite subject for artists of the day, among them the sculptor Jacob Epstein and the portraitist De Laszlo. There are at least two Royal Doulton figurines of her, one holding the monkey that was part of the play Romance.